I'm a straight woman who's been to a few strip clubs (with women dancers, though I have caught a male dance show in Vegas). Some with my boyfriend, some with a mixed group of people I worked with (it had a lunch buffet), and again to the same place with the buffet with just a couple of women I worked with, because by then we'd all been there a few times and found it to be an amusing place to go have a drink.
It was a lot less weird - and frankly a lot less exciting - than I thought it would be (most of these places are just bars that also have naked women dancing), but that comes with some caveats. Mostly that I was always with a group I felt comfortable with, which makes a big difference. Also, while a lot of the women who get into this come from really f'd up situations and are taken advantage of, there are as many or more that are just normal people doing a job that some of them enjoy as much as anyone can enjoy their job. Not because they love the guys they dance for (they don't, even if they're good at pretending), but because if you're at a vaguely legit club with management and security that looks out for you, you can make VERY good money. The cliche about putting yourself through law school is kind of a joke, but there are cases where it and similar things are true. You can make a lot more cash doing it than you can waiting tables or bar tending, if you need something part-time to fit around weird hours and taking your clothes off doesn't bother you.
There's nothing misogynistic in and of itself about a strip club. Some of the men who run those places ARE the worst kind of creeps, however, and it's not like you can tell good ones from bad just by looking at the outside of a place. Like any bar, leave if you don't feel comfortable. In the end, I guess they bother me much less than restaurants like Hooters do. There's no pretense or attempt to go 'tee-hee people don't come here to look at boobs.' Sure they do, and that's OK, just treat the dancers with respect and remember they're entertainers, not your imaginary girlfriend. It's all about respect, and misogyny is ultimately about a lack of respect far more than it is about what someone's wearing.